

After a quick restroom break and purchasing our walking sticks, we were ready.
The walking sticks, are just that...walking sticks. At each station you pay about $2 and they will brand your walking stick with a marker. It just shows that you have made it to that station. It is a really neat souvenir to bring home. So, about 10:30pm our adventure begins. The reason for doing a night climb is to see the sunrise while you are on top of Mt. Fuji. Plus, the weather is much, much cooler! We had quite a few difficulties along the
way. One of my friends was having severe trouble with the altitude, then she started getting panic attacks. Honestly, she probably shouldn't have been climbing, but she hung in there. Because of my friend, we had to go extremely slow. The average climber can make it to the summit in 4-5 hours. It took us eight! We didn't make it to the summit before the sun came up at 4:30am. But, I think we were the lucky ones there. The people who made it to the top had cloud coverage and they didn't get to see the sunrise. We were about 500m below them at station 8.5 and had a beautiful view! As usual, the pictures don't do it justice.


Then on the way down, my other friend fell and hurt her knee. So, we had to go extremely slow on the decent as well. All in all, it took us 12 hours of hiking to climb Mt. Fuji. I really don't have any desire to do it again. It is a very hard climb. At times (actually about 1/2) the trail is huge rocks that are at least a 45 degree angle. You have to use your hands and literally climb up the mountain. The other half is loose rocks and dirt, so like walking on the beach. There is a lot of drag.
The Japanese have a saying about climbing Mt. Fuji, "A wise man will climb Mt. Fuji once, a fool will climb it a second time, and a white man climbs it a third."
2 comments:
The amazing things you get to do and will continue to do while living there! I'm jealous. Your pictures are awesome too! Keep them coming!
These are great pictures. I want to see your walking stick some time. That is an inovative way to get some tourist dollars! Saw that you were home safe and sound from Australia and look forward to seeing your blog additions.
Kristen
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